Coffee maker



April 17, 1928. 1.66.6,070

c. E. PAGE COFFEE MAKER Filed Jan. 30, 1928 Fatented Apro 1?, EQZQO entree stares insane CHARLES E. PAGE, @E' 1105 ANGELES, CALEQRNIA.

' cornea manna. Application died January 30, 1928. fieriai No. 250,448.

This invention relates to cofiee makers such as are now in vogue for making drip coffee. This coilee is made by allowing hot water to drip through the ground cofiee. Devices for this purpose usually include in their construction a holder for the ground I cofiee, and this bottom is perforated to permit the dripping of the cofiee through it.

The general object of this invention is to improve the general construction of coffee makers of this type; also to provide a construction. which will enable the cost of the cofiee makers to be reduced.

One of the objects of the invention is to construct the device so as to enable it to be used with coffee ots of diiferent sizes.

One of the obgects of the invention is to provide a form for the bottom of the re ceiver for the ground coifee which will operate to increase the efiective area of the filtering paper.

lit is customary to provide an inner cover for the receiver that holds the ground cofiee at the bottom of the water bowl; This inner cover is perforated to permit the water to pass through the cofiee from the bowl, and one' of the objects of-this invention is to provide an improved construction for this cover to reduce the cost of manufacture and to facilitate the locking ofthe cover in place. This is an advantageous feature ofthe invention because it revents the swelling of the wet ground co ee from forcing the inner cover out of the coifee' receiver in such all a way as to flood the same with the water from the bowl.

Further objects of the invention will appear hereinafter.

The invention consists in the novel parts and combination of. parts to be described hereinafter, all of which contribute to produce an eflicient coifee maker.

A preferred embodiment of the invention is described in the following specification, while the broad scope of the nvention is pointed out in the appended claims.

earner enema In the drawing:

Figure l is a vertical section through a coffee maker embodying my invention: and

Figure 2' is a plan of the bottom or lower end of the coffee receiver.

Figure 3 is a vertical section through the bottom of the coffee receiver upon an enlarged scale, broken away and illustrating the relation of the filter paper to the corrugations in the bottom.

Figure 4 is a vert'cal section about on the line H of Fig. 1 broken away, and illus= trating details of the construction of the handle for the cover of the codes receiver.

In practicing the invention. ll provide a water bowl 1 which is preferably formed of sheet metal in the shape of a cylinder. This bowl may be spun from a sheet of metal in such away that a downwardly projecting coffee receiver 2 is formed integra with the bowl. The body of this receiver 2 is of slightly'conical shape and connected b a cylindrical neck 3 with the water howl. body 2 of the cofiee receiver has a bottom d which is also integral with the body, and this bottom is foraminous. lln the present instance, it is formed of a plate integral with the side of the codes receiver and provided with perforations 5.,

When in-use, the coifee maker is inserted in the upper openingfi in the. upper end of a cofiee pot '2 indicated by the dotted line. After the ground cofiee has been placed in the receiver 2, its upper end is. closed by means of an inner cover 8. This cover may be secured in place by means of one or more bayonet slots 9 cooperating with bosses such as at 10, projecting in from the side wall of the neck 3 of the device. The bayonet slots are formed by ofi-setting the material of the collar 9 as indicated.

'The cover 8 is provided with perforations 11, and is also provided with an integral handle 12 struck up from the material and formed on its sides with concave faces 13 to operate as finger holds. This handle enables the cover to be rotated and lifted when disengaging it at the bayonet slots 9. The handle 12 is somewhat elongated, which facilitates the impartingof this rotary movement to the cover.

On the bottom 4 I provide a filtering mat 14, of suitable material such as filter paper. This mat is simply a disk of paper that is laid on the bottom (see Figure 1). The

the perforations which would permit coffee grounds to pass through into the coffee pot. By reason of the presence of the filter paper the coffee which drips through the bottom 4 is very clear and free from grounds and insoluble fats.

The corrugations should be deep .enou h and near enough to enable them to hold t e filterpaper in the zones 15 out of contact with the perforations 5 which llform on the sides of the corrugations. It is preferable to have these perforations 5 on the sides rather than in the bottoms of the corrugations because in the latter case the paper hecomes drawndown to the bottom of the corrugations and the efiective filtering area of the paper becomes substantially the same as the area of the perforations. "With the rela-.

tion shown in Fig. 3 the efiective filtering area is far greater than that of the perforations.

The word principal in the claims in referring to the perforations, means that the major part of the perforations are in the side walls. It is obvious that some minor unimportant perforations might be made either in the top or bottom of the corrugawearout or become dislodged.

The water bowl 1 is provided with a cover 15 having a suitable handle 16-. This cover is provided with a flange 17 that projects down into the lip of the bowl, and this flange 1s provided with a plurality of bayonet slots 18 similar to the bayonet slots 9. The lip of the bowl is provided with a plurality of bosses 19 to cooperate with these bayonet slots. I prefer to provide at least four of these bayonet slots to facilitate the proper alinement of the cover with the bowl in placing the cover upon it.

also prefer to provide four ofthe bayonet slots9 for attaching the inner cover 8 on the coffee receiver 12.

By reason of the conical shape of the lower gortionof the cofiee receiver, it will be evicut that this device can be used with cofiee pots of different sizes, that is to say, cofiee water bowl having neeaoro pots having openings at their upper ends of different diameters. The conical form of the coffee receiver also facilitates making the bowl and receiver in one piece.

The interior of the bowl is provided with a plurality of horizontal gauge lines 20 which correspond to different numbers of cups of coffee desired; that is to say, these lines indicate the point to which the bowl should be filled withlwater for making different amounts of coffee.

What I claim is:

1. Ina coffee maker, the combination of a container in the form of a metal'water bowl of relatively large diameter, said bowl having an extension'of reduced diameter at its lower end, constituting a receptacle for the ground coffee, andadapted to be received in the upper opening of a coffee pot, said reduced extension having an integral bottom with corrugations formed therein with. the principal perforations in the side walls of the corrugations, and operating to support a sheet of filter paper with the ground cofiee disposed above the same, and a perforated cover for the reduced extension operating as a bottom for the'said water bowl.

2. In a cofiee maker, the combination of a container in the form of av metal water bowl of relatively large diameter, said bowl having an extension of reduced diameter at its lower end constituting a receptacle for the ground coffee and adapted to be received inv the upper opening of a cofiee pot, said reduced extension having an integral bottom with a, pluralityof annular corrugations with the principal perforations in the side walls of-the corrugations, a sheet or filter paper supported-on the said bottom, and a perforated cover for the reduced extension operating as a bottom for the said water bowl.

3. ln acoflee maker, the combination of a container in the form of a metal water bowl of relatively large diameter, said bowl having an integral extension of reduced di-.

ameter at its lower. end, constituting a receptacle for the ground codes, and adapted to be received in the upper opening of a coffee pot, said reduced extension having an integral bottom with corrugations formed. therein with the principal perforations in the side walls of the corrugations, and operating to support a sheet of filter paper with the ground codes disposed above the.

fill

same, a perforated cover for. the reduced extension operating as a bottom for the said water bowl, and means for lockingthe cover in position. Y

4. In a coffee maker, the combination of a a cofiee receptacle extending 'downwar y therefrom, a perforated cover at the bottom of the bowl, said cover having an integral handle struck upraw wardly from the material forming the cover, said handle being of elongated form to facilitate rotation of the cover when in place, and a bayonet slot connection between the cover and the coffee receptacle to secure 'cover in place.

5. A coffee maker consisting of a substantially cylindrical, relatively large bowl with an extension at its lower end, including a substantially cylindrical neck adjacent the bowl with a substantially conical extension below the neck and forming a receiver for the coffee, said receiver having a plurality of annular corrugations with perforations only in the sides thereof, said bowl having a plurality of gauge lines formed on the inner face thereof to indicate the quantity of water to be used in making different amounts of coffee.

6. In a coffee maker, the combination of a container in the form of a metal bowl of relatively large diameter, said bowl having an extension of reduced diameter at its lower end constituting a receptacle for the ground coffee, and adapted to be received in the upper opening of a coifeepot, said. reduced extension havlng a bottom with corrugations formed therein with perforations only in the side walls of the corrugations, and operating to support a sheet of filter paper with the ground coffee disposed above the same, and a perforated cover for the reduced extension operating as a bottom for the said water bowl.

Signed at Los Angeles, California, this 25th day of January, 1928.

CHARLES E. PAGE. 

